Synoptic/planetary-scale interactions and blocking over the North Atlantic Ocean

The focus was on the development of a blocking anticyclone that formed over the North Atlantic in January 1979 and a marine cyclone that deepened explosively prior to the onset of the block. The extended height tendency equation was used as the primary diagnostic tool. Focusing on the domain encompa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Phillip J.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19900002745
Description
Summary:The focus was on the development of a blocking anticyclone that formed over the North Atlantic in January 1979 and a marine cyclone that deepened explosively prior to the onset of the block. The extended height tendency equation was used as the primary diagnostic tool. Focusing on the domain encompassing the migrating ridge that eventually formed the block, it was found that vorticity advection played the dominant role in the development of the ridge and the formation of the block. Also of interest was an attempt to evaluate the relative importance of synoptic-scale, planetary-scale, and synoptic/planetary-scale interactions as the block developed. To accomplish this, all data fields were partitioned into synoptic and planetary-scale components using a Barnes-type filter. Finally, the cyclone was diagnosed by examining the low level static stability fields associated with the cyclone's development.